The Parkes multibeam pulsar survey (pksmb) published its results in papers published from 1995 to 2017 with a total of 833 new pulsars discovered. It detected a grand total of 289 pulsars. The fastest pulsar discovered was J1843-1113 with a period of 1.84567 milliseconds and the slowest pulsar was J1001-5939 with a period of 7.73364 seconds.
The smallest pulsar dispersion measure was J1455-3330 with a DM of 13.56977 pc/cc and the largest pulsar dispersion measure was J1849-0040 with a DM of 1267.6 pc/cc. There were a total of 545 pulsars known before the first discovery was published. This survey increased the total amount of known pulsars by 153.0%.
There were 26 papers written about the discoveries of this survey: Discovery of Two High Magnetic Field Radio Pulsars, Discovery of a Young Radio Pulsar in a Relativistic Binary Orbit, The Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey: PSR J1811-1736, a pulsar in a highly eccentric binary system, The Parkes multi-beam pulsar survey - I. Observing and data analysis systems, discovery and timing of 100 pulsars, PSR J1016-5857: A Young Radio Pulsar with Possible Supernova Remnant, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Associations, Discovery of Five Binary Radio Pulsars, Two Young Radio Pulsars Coincident with EGRET Sources, PSR J1740-3052: a pulsar with a massive companion, The Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey - II. Discovery and timing of 120 pulsars, The Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey - III. Young pulsars and the discovery and timing of 200 pulsars, PSR J1847-0130: A Radio Pulsar with Magnetar Spin Characteristics, The Parkes multibeam pulsar survey - IV. Discovery of 180 pulsars and parameters for 281 previously known pulsars, The Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey - V. Finding binary and millisecond pulsars, iscovery of Three Wide-Orbit Binary Pulsars: Implications for Binary Evolution and Equivalence Principles, The Parkes Multibeam Pulsar Survey - VI. Discovery and timing of 142 pulsars and a Galactic population analysis, Transient radio bursts from rotating neutron stars, Discovery of 28 pulsars using new techniques for sorting pulsar candidates, PSR J1753-2240: a mildly recycled pulsar in an eccentric binary system, An interference removal technique for radio pulsar searches, Election of radio pulsar candidates using artificial neural networks, Further searches for Rotating Radio Transients in the Parkes Multi-beam Pulsar Survey, Rotating Radio Transients: new discoveries, timing solutions and musings, Discovery of Five New Pulsars in Archival Data, Einstein@Home Discovery of 24 Pulsars in the Parkes Multi-beam Pulsar Survey, Coherent acceleration search of the Parkes multibeam pulsar survey - techniques and the discovery and timing of 16 pulsars, Timing Solution and Single-pulse Properties for Eight Rotating Radio Transients.